diff --git a/content/post/desert-headwinds/index.md b/content/post/desert-headwinds/index.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000..d54cce3 --- /dev/null +++ b/content/post/desert-headwinds/index.md @@ -0,0 +1,64 @@ ++++ +title = "Into the Headwinds: Riding the Thar in April" +date = 2025-04-23 +categories = ["Guides"] +tags = ["heat", "desert", "hydration", "headwind", "april", "route-planning"] +slug = "desert-headwinds" +image = "thar-desert-ride.webp" +description = "Tips, reflections, and hard truths from a solo April ride through Rajasthan's desert winds." +keywords = [ + "cycling in Thar desert", + "how to ride in desert winds", + "bikepacking in Rajasthan", + "headwind cycling tips", + "desert riding gear", + "gravel biking", + "solo tour India", + "heat management cycling" +] ++++ + +There is no shade on the road from [Phalodi](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phalodi) to [Pokhran](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pokhran). No trees, no dhabas, not even the illusion of one in the mirage. Just heat. And wind. Relentless wind. + +Riding the Thar in April isn't poetic. It’s a war of attrition. Every kilometre is a whispered negotiation with your body — and every headwind a reminder of nature’s quiet dominance. + +But if you must do it — if something in you stirs for the barren beauty of dunes and camel tracks — then let this be your field guide: + +## 1. Begin Early + +Not ‘early’ as in 8am. Start pedalling by 5. Watch the desert change colour as the sun rises. By 10, you should be wrapped in shade somewhere, nursing electrolytes and listening to your heartbeat return to normal. + +## 2. Water Strategy > Speed Strategy + +Carry more than you think. Then more. LifeStraw bottles saved my ride; two on the frame, one in the pannier, filled at wells, temples, and the occasional army canteen. + +## 3. Wind Will Break You + +It’s not romantic. It’s not cinematic. It’s just *work*. A 15kmph headwind in 42°C heat feels like cycling into a hairdryer. Accept it. Or change your direction and let it push you like a sail. + + + +## 4. Camaraderie Comes in Camels + +Don’t expect fellow cyclists out here. Your companions are curious kids, old men with turbans, and the occasional camel who gives you a slow blink of approval. + +## 5. Route Picks + +- **Phalodi → Pokhran** is brutal. No shade, no services. Only attempt with backup. +- **Jaisalmer → Khuri** is more forgiving and stunning at golden hour. +- Avoid **NH11 past 11AM** unless you’ve got shade stops marked. + +## 6. Don’t Chase Speed. Chase Survival + +This isn’t a ride to break records. It’s a ride that breaks and remakes you. Slowly. In the silence between gusts. + + + +--- + +If you ride the Thar, ride it with respect. Not as a conquest, but as a conversation. +The desert doesn’t shout. It whispers. If you listen, you might just find what you came looking for. + +--- diff --git a/content/post/desert-headwinds/thar-desert-ride.webp b/content/post/desert-headwinds/thar-desert-ride.webp new file mode 100644 index 0000000..0143a3a Binary files /dev/null and b/content/post/desert-headwinds/thar-desert-ride.webp differ